Course Content
Zambian Paediatric & Obstetrics-Gynecology (OB/GYN) Clinical Mastery

Complete Abortion 

Definition

Complete abortion occurs when all products of conception are expelled from the uterus. The uterus is typically well-contracted, and vaginal bleeding is minimal or absent.

Etiology / Risk Factors

  • Spontaneous miscarriage that progresses naturally to completion

  • Effective medical or surgical termination of pregnancy

Signs and Symptoms

  1. Vaginal bleeding: Minimal or absent

  2. Uterus: Smaller than expected for gestational age; well-contracted

  3. Cervical examination: Cervix may be open or closed

Investigations

  • Ultrasound: To confirm complete expulsion and absence of retained products

  • Full Blood Count (FBC): Evaluate for anemia

  • Optional: Blood group and cross-match if blood transfusion is anticipated

Management

Supportive Care

  • Post-abortion antibiotics:

    • Amoxicillin 500 mg PO every 8 hours for 5 days

    • Metronidazole 400 mg PO every 8 hours for 5 days

  • Iron and folate supplementation:

    • FeFol 1 tablet twice daily for 3 months; reassess hemoglobin every 4 weeks

Emergency Management (if patient is in shock)

  • Call for help and mobilize resources

  • ABCD principles: Airway, Breathing, Circulation, Dehydration

  • IV fluids: RL/NS 3 liters or more within the first hour

  • Blood transfusion if indicated

  • Indwelling urethral catheter insertion

  • IV antibiotics: Ceftriaxone 1 g + Metronidazole 500 mg stat

  • Laboratory tests: HB, grouping, cross-match

  • Referral: Transfer patient to hospital with a nurse escort

Patient Education and Counselling

  • Discuss post-abortion contraception options and provide method of choice

  • Advise on signs of complications: excessive bleeding, fever, foul-smelling discharge, abdominal pain

  • Provide emotional support and counselling for the patient

Summary / Key Points

  1. Complete abortion: All products expelled, minimal bleeding, well-contracted uterus

  2. Investigations: Ultrasound to confirm, FBC to monitor anemia

  3. Treatment: Supportive care, antibiotics, iron and folate

  4. Shock management: ABCD resuscitation, IV fluids, antibiotics, blood transfusion

  5. Patient counselling: Contraception and signs of complications

 

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